King blazes path through math

Christina King teaches math at Owensville High School on Nov. 3, 2015. An OHS graduate, King plans to pursue a teaching career after graduating from Missouri S&T. Sam O’Keefe/Missouri S&T

No one told her she couldn’t do it. No one, that is, but herself.

Christina King graduated from Owensville (Missouri) High School in 1997, and her path was clear — and it didn’t include college.

“It wasn’t really anything I thought I could do,” King says. “Coming out of high school, I wanted to get married and start a family. Going to college wasn’t anything I even thought about.”

Eighteen years later, that thought has been turned upside down, and King is set to become a December 2015 graduate of Missouri S&T with a bachelor’s degree in mathematics.

Before coming to Missouri S&T, King’s path was just as she envisioned it. She married her high school sweetheart, Jason. She had two girls, Kaitlynn and Cassidy.

Before she knew it, King’s children were school age. And with Jason gone for a week at a time working as a welder on railroad bridges, King needed something to do. When her youngest daughter Cassidy, now 15, was in kindergarten, King volunteered at the girls’ school.

The seed was planted for her college career to come.

School days

Twelve years after graduating from high school, King enrolled in East Central College in August 2009.

It wasn’t exactly easy to be a full-time mom and a full-time student, but she managed. It helped that she took most classes while her kids were in school, and it helped to have family nearby who could take care of the girls.

She graduated from East Central in May 2012 with an associate’s degree in teaching. Before King got her degree, Dr. Jana Neiss, director of Missouri S&T’s Teacher Education Program, visited East Central and encouraged students to consider S&T.

In January 2013, King enrolled at Missouri S&T.

The calculus of calculus

King didn’t bother to dip a toe in when she started at Missouri S&T. She jumped in with both feet. One of her first classes was Calculus III.

“I thought I must be a glutton for punishment when I got here and was thrown into the upper-level classes,” King says with a laugh.

But she thrived in the new environment. On a small campus, she made good friends — good friends who are nearly 20 years her junior.

But from Euclid’s Elements to today, math has no age limits or requirements.

“With math … I just love math,” King says.

Soon she’ll pass along that love to high school or middle school math students. In the summer, King took Project Lead The Way pre-service teacher courses on Introduction to Engineering Design for high school teachers and Automation Robotics for middle school teachers.

She’s hopeful that she’ll have a full-time job in the fall of 2016. Until then, King will substitute teach when the holiday break ends at schools in Owensville and Sullivan, Missouri.

It’s all possible because she took a chance — on herself and on her future. Once she started, nothing was going to stand in her way.

“I think coming back as a non-traditional student really made me work hard to get good grades and be a good student,” King says. “I don’t think that would have happened if I had gone to college right out of high school.”